This item has been sold, but you can get on the Waitlist to be notified if another example becomes available, or purchase a digital scan.

1862 Harpers Weekly View of Washington D.C. and vicinity

Washington-harpersweekly-1862
$175.00
General Birds-Eye View of Washington and the Vicinity, Showing the Forts, Camps, Railroads, Rivers, etc. - Main View
Processing...

1862 Harpers Weekly View of Washington D.C. and vicinity

Washington-harpersweekly-1862


Title


General Birds-Eye View of Washington and the Vicinity, Showing the Forts, Camps, Railroads, Rivers, etc.
  1862 (dated)     16 x 21 in (40.64 x 53.34 cm)

Description


This is a stunning 1862 birds-eye view map or view of Washington D. C. and vicinity issued in the January 4, 1862 edition of Harper's Weekly. This view offers a fascinating snapshot of the nation's capitol shortly after the outbreak of the American Civil War. The view captures Washington looking southward from around Mayfair towards Warrenton and beyond.

The map shows the capital and its vicinity in considerable detail. Streets, railroads, parks, rivers, forts, camps, bridges and important buildings are noted throughout with a legend along the bottom of the view. Some of these include Bluff Point, Mount Vernon, Fort Washington, Alexandria, Hunting Creek, Aqueduct Bridge, Little Falls, Prospect Hill, Navy Yard, Washington Monument, City Hall, Capitol, President's House (former name for the White House) etc.

This view was issued as part of the January 4, 1862 edition of Harper's Weekly, with part of Charles Dickens' new Christmas Stories appearing on verso.

Cartographer


Harper and Brothers (1817 – Present) is New York based American printing publishing firm founded in 1817 by James Harper and his brother John Harper as J. and J. Harper (1817-1833). Their younger brothers Joseph Wesley Harper and Fletcher Harper joined the company around 1926 prompting the 1833 imprint change to Harper and Brothers (1833 – 1962). The firm published countless books, magazines, prints, maps, and more. They began publishing a monthly magazine, Harper's Monthly in 1850. The success of Harper's Monthly led to the introduction of a popular weekly illustrated journal, Harper's Weekly published from 1857 - 1916. They later introduced Harper's Bazar (1867) and Harper's Young People (1879). From about 1899 the business went through a series of permutations selling off some assets and developing others. The company merged with Row, Peters and Company inn 1962, rebranding itself as Harper and Row (1962 – 1990), which was acquired by Marshall Pickering in 1988. It was acquired by Rupert Mordoch (News Corp) and merged with William Collins and Sons in 1990 to form HaprerCollins (1990 – Present), the imprint under which it still publishes. Their original offices were at 331 Franklin Street, roughly below today's Manhattan Bridge. Today they have many offices and are one of the world's largest publishing companies and one of the 'Big Five' English-language publishers. More by this mapmaker...

Source


Harper's Weekly, Jan 4, 1862, p. 8-9.    

Condition


Very good. Minor wear and toning along original centerfold. Minor spotting and edge wear. Text on verso.

References


Princeton University Library, Graphic Arts Collection, GA 2008.01672.